Friday, October 24, 2014

.
I am a Canadian,
free to speak without fear,
free to worship in my own way,
free to stand for what I think right,
free to oppose what I believe wrong,
or free to choose those who shall govern my country.
This heritage of freedom
I pledge to uphold
for myself and all mankind.

The Canadian Charter of Rights & Freedoms

Do not mistake our quiet and polite nature as being passive. That would be a big mistake. When called upon Canada has always been there!

2nd Boer War: 1902

In 1899, fighting erupted between Great Britain and two small
republics in South Africa.
The two republics, settled by Boers,
descendants of the region's first Dutch immigrants, were not expected to
survive for long against the world's greatest power. Pro-Empire
Canadians nevertheless urged their government to help. The war, they
argued, pitted British freedom, justice, and civilization against Boer
backwardness.
While many English-Canadians supported Britain's cause in South
Africa, most French-Canadians and many recent immigrants from countries
other than Britain wondered why Canada should fight in a war half way
around the world. Concerned with maintaining national stability and
political popularity, Prime Minister Sir Wilfrid Laurier did not want to
commit his government. Yet the bonds of Empire were strong and public
pressure mounted. As a compromise, Laurier agreed to send a battalion of
volunteers to South Africa.
Over the next three years, more than 7,000 Canadians, including 12
women nurses, served overseas. They would fight in key battles from
Paardeberg to Leliefontein. The Boers inflicted
heavy losses on the
British, but were defeated in several key engagements. Refusing to
surrender, the Boers turned to a guerrilla war of ambush and retreat. In
this second phase of fighting, Canadians participated in numerous small
actions. Gruelling mounted patrols sought to bring the enemy to battle,
and harsh conditions ensured that all soldiers struggled against disease
and snipers' bullets. The Boers were finally defeated. Of the Canadians who served in South Africa, 267 were killed and are
listed in the Books of Remembrance. The Canadian government claimed at
the time that this overseas expedition was not a precedent. History
would prove otherwise. The new century would see Canadians serve in
two world wars, the Korean War, and dozens of peacekeeping
missions.

Passchendaele: 1917

The Canadians arrived in Flanders in mid-October to relieve
Australian and New Zealand troops and were shocked by the terrible
battlefield conditions. Currie ordered the construction of new roads,
the building or improvement of gun pits, and the repair and extension of
tramlines (light railways). Horses and mules transported hundreds of
thousands of shells to the front to prepare for the artillery barrage
that would prepare for the infantry’s attack. The Germans atop
Passchendaele ridge fired continuously on these efforts, killing or
wounding hundreds.
His preparations ready, Currie launched a deliberate or ‘set-piece’
attack on October 26, the first of four phases in a battle he estimated
might cost 16,000 Canadians killed or wounded. By mid-November, having
captured the ridge, his estimate proved eerily accurate, with 15,654
Canadian fallen.

Vimy Ridge: Within minutes Canada became a Nation

In the
week leading up to the battle, Canadian and British artillery
pounded the enemy positions on the ridge, killing and tormenting defenders.
New artillery tactics allowed the gunners to first target, then destroy
enemy positions. A nearly limitless supply of artillery shells and the
new 106 fuse, which allowed shells to explode on contact, as opposed to
burying themselves in ground, facilitated the destruction of hardened
defences and barbed wire. The Canadian infantry would be well supported
when it went into battle with over 1,000 artillery pieces laying down
withering, supportive fire.

Attacking together for the first time, the four Canadian divisions
stormed the ridge at 5:30am on 9 April 1917. More than 15,000 Canadian
infantry overran the Germans all along the front. Incredible bravery
and discipline allowed the infantry to continue moving forward under
heavy fire, even when their officers were killed.
There were countless
acts of sacrifice, as Canadians single-handedly charged machine-gun
nests or forced the surrender of Germans in protective dugouts. Hill
145, the highest and most important feature of the Ridge, and where
the Vimy monument now stands, was captured
in a frontal bayonet charge
against machine-gun positions. Three more days of costly battle
delivered final victory. The Canadian operation was an important
success, even if the larger British and French offensive, of which it
had been a part, had failed. But it was victory at a heavy cost: 3,598
Canadians were killed and another 7,000 wounded.
The capture of Vimy was more than just an important battlefield victory.
For the first time all four Canadian divisions attacked together: men
from all regions of Canada were present at the battle. Brigadier-General
A.E. Ross declared after the war, "in those few minutes I witnessed
the birth of a nation." BGen A.E. Ross

While Canadians remain bitterly divided as to what our role in the war against ISIS should be, the one indisputable fact is this: We will never allow those we have shared our home with to harm our Canadian troops.

It is wonderful to feel the grandness of Canada in the raw, not because
she is Canada but because she's something sublime that you were born
into, some great rugged power that you are a part of.
- Emily Carr (1871-1945)